prejudicially
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
A bias occurs when you prejudicially favor one person, place, thing, or idea over another.
From Textbooks • Dec. 21, 2021
Schwartz provides a very balanced examination of Kissinger’s intellectual and political trajectory, neither prejudicially critical nor too laudatory: a solid middle ground between the numerous “war criminal” condemnations and the many “SuperK” hagiographies.
From Washington Post • Sep. 17, 2020
It also has a more metaphorical meaning as a phrase indicating that its speaker is stubbornly and perhaps prejudicially unwilling to deal with inevitable changes to a world that he/she no longer feels comfortable in.
From Slate • Jul. 5, 2018
Until that time, I had been doubly primed to hate L.A.—I lived in New York and grew up in Northern California, two regions prejudicially disposed against the city.
From The New Yorker • Jun. 11, 2014
But another influence began to affect his circumstances prejudicially about this time, and that is, the evil fortunes of his brother Henry of Snitterfield.
From Shakespeare's Family by Stopes, C. C. (Charlotte Carmichael)